The easiest ways to tell large dates from small are that; 1) The 2 looks like a swan in the large date, 2) The date is much further away from the...
Or the reverse of a Roosevelt Dime.
"D-D-D-D-Did you get that Mint Mark stamped into that die yet?"
If I know a girl named Dorothy that is Polish, does that make her a Polka Dot?
Thank you. I will bow to the accolades. I have always liked the Cleveland. Mostly because of the map and the geography of the Midwest and the...
Deep Mirror Proof Like, DMPL. It is the designation used by PCGS and most collectors. Pronounced, "dimple".
Another option is a grade set. A run of dollars grading from Poor-1 to AU-58, or en into Uncirculated grades MS-60 to MS-67.
The man had his issues, but he was a numismatic genius. I got to see him at work in Long Beach in the 80's. What a memory. These dealers were...
Well done! And I agree, P/L is even iffy. The best Morgans for quality are the 1879-S to 1882-S. They were doing something very right in San Fran....
The VF's (I would do XF-AU) would actually be the easiest to sell and have the lowest possible loss on your purchase price.
Carbon spots are my least favorite damage outside of staple scratches. I would even prefer a finger print.
It would probably grade PL, but not DMPL. A 64PL is not worth a couple of hundred dollars for an 1881-S. They are almost rarer without any...
That ship has sailed. We're headed for an electron-based monetary unit. But it won't be a BitCoin.
As Walter Breen called it, the 5-Finger Word: G - R - E - E - D! They think they are getting something worth a fortune for next to nothing....
A: 64 B: 66
Good idea. Keeps people from getting ideas and having inappropriate thoughts.
It was intended for the guy that posted the 1999 Lincoln Cent on your Kennedy Half Dollar posting.
"Thank you sir, may I have another?"
I met a guy that was willing to protect his gold and silver with a pistol. He was still dealing with shooting his drug-addicted son that broke...
How well does that work when you're not home?
Separate names with a comma.